Golovkin vs. Jacobs Recap

Congratulations to two classy warriors who gave us a terrific effort at Madison Square Garden last weekend.  Gennady “GGG” Golovkin and Daniel “Miracle Man” Jacobs put on a show that while not a war, was entertaining and correctly scored.

If boxing regularly had nights like that MMA would still be a niche sport.  Gennady Golovkin retained his unified middleweight championship with a competitive unanimous decision over Daniel Jacobs.

I had it 116-111 for the champ.  Some had it a little closer with the 4th round knockdown of Jacobs being the difference (I gave both the first 2 completely uneventful rounds to Golovkin because he is the champ).

Some media scored the fight for Jacobs.  He fought really well, showed his courage and his stock went up in the loss (wish more fighters and promoters would realize this can happen) but sometimes when a fighter with Golovkin’s knockout dominance is challenged, people think he lost the fight.  I believe this happened in the Hagler-Leonard fight to some degree.

Jacobs felt he won and I have no problem with that.  Anytime a fight is this competitive, both fighters and their teams each feel they won.

But the judges got this one right.  Jacobs proved he is elite and Golovkin proved he can gut it out in deep waters when an opponent does not wilt to his power.

However, GGG also looks like age is beginning to creep up on him.  He turns 35 on April 8th.  That was once over-the-hill for a fighter.

Golovkin is still terrific, but he is on the other side of his physical prime.  The fact he is now being challenged by better fighters like Jacobs and Kell Brook accentuate this.

The fight did over 170,000 buys which is not great, but not terrible considering it was up against college basketball.  Why boxing does not flood the month of February with big fights when sports fans have little to watch is beyond me.

If this fight took place a month ago these guys may have ended up on the cover of Sports Illustrated.  So, what’s next for these two?  A rematch is justifiable but I’d prefer to see it a little down the road.

I think the perfect fight for Jacobs right now is with David Lemieux.  Lemieux was stopped by Golovkin but has looked impressive since, especially his last fight with a devastating knockout of Curtis Stevenson.

The winner of that fight would put himself in line for a rematch with GGG, especially if Jacobs wins.  He would be the favorite, but Lemieux can really punch!

Golovkin wants to stay active.  I love this about him.  Most established fighters fight twice per year these days.  The Kazakh warrior is hoping to get WBO paper champion Billy Joe Saunders (in my last article I mistakenly called Saunders the IBF champion; Golovkin has the IBF belt) in June for the undisputed title.

Saunders is calling for Golovkin again; let’s see if Jacobs’ performance gets the Brit to actually put his name on the contract this time.  Should Golovkin take care of business in that fight, and if Saul “Canelo” Alvarez defeats Julio Cesar Chavez Jr. in May (no guarantee) there will be great demand for Golovkin-Canelo in September.

One thing I would want to avoid if I were with Team Golovkin is fighting Saunders in Great Britain.  I would not trust the judging over there with a possible Canelo fight looming.

They were fixing to rob GGG when he went to England to fight Kell Brook last September.  Two judges had it even through 4 rounds, and another had it 39-37 in Brook’s favor before he was stopped in the 5th.

Bring the fight to Kazakhstan, knock him out, then go get the red-haired Mexican.  If Golovkin defeats Canelo or can’t get him in the ring, and Jacobs continues to win I’d like a rematch.

Golovkin will be a year older at that point and these two now know each other better than their own mothers in some ways.  Will GGG’s age and Jacobs confidence turn the tide?  Or would Jacobs confidence make him more vulnerable to a possibly more aggressive champion?  Time will tell.  Whatever happens, thanks to these two throwbacks for a terrific show.  Talk soon.

-Marksman

PS:  If you tuned in to the NCAA Wrestling Championships last week you saw Cory Clark (Iowa) win the 133 lb. title with a torn ligament in his hand and a shoulder that popped out twice during the season.

That was following Olympic Gold Medalist Kyle Snyder (Ohio State) winning the heavyweight crown (his 3rd) with a rib cage injury.  Remember these guys in May when baseball players making tens of millions per year are sitting out a month with a strained quad.

PPS:  Check out 60 minutes this Sunday on CBS.  They are running a segment on fake news.  Mike Cernovich (http://www.dangerandplay.com) will be featured.  He was instrumental to Trump’s election.

Golovkin vs. Jacobs Preview and Prediction

On 3/18/17 the two best middleweights in the world square off for the unified championship of the world at Madison Square Garden (broadcast on HBO Pay-Per-View).  WBC, WBA and WBO champion Gennady “GGG” Golovkin (36-0, 33 KO) of Kazakhstan takes on WBA champion Daniel “Miracle Man” Jacobs (33-1, 29 KO) of Brooklyn.

You may logically ask how there can be two WBA champions.  The sanctioning bodies’ corruption knows no limits.  They declared Golovkin their “super champion” and Jacobs their “regular Champion” based on a shameless thirst for sanctioning fees.

BTW-the WBA is does not stand alone in this practice.  However, this corruption actually plays well for a change to boxing fans as the WBA’s shenanigans ended up making this fight mandatory.

I once again have to call this the unified championship rather than the undisputed championship because in the cloudy alphabet soup of sanctioning bodies creating confusion in the sport, a Brit named Billy Joe Saunders was able to claim the IBF’s version of the middleweight crown.  Saunders has developed quite a reputation of calling for Golovkin between fights, but never managing to get his name on a contract for a battle which would crown an undisputed champ.

If you wonder why the Ultimate Fighting Championship is passing boxing in popularity you can look to this kind of s**t.  Just like boxing, the UFC has good and bad fights; they have events that live up to expectations, and events that disappoint.

The difference is you are not keeping your title in the UFC without taking on the next best contender in your weight class.  People easily know who the champ in each weight is.

Now, back to our combatants.  Gennady Golovkin is the Marvin Hagler of his time.  Though a more powerful puncher but not as complete a fighter as Hagler, he is a no-nonsense knockout artist (23 straight inside the distance) intent on dominating whoever will get in the ring with him.

Like Hagler, he is finding it difficult to lure worthy big-name foes to advance his stardom.  Hagler eventually got that in 1983 when Roberto Duran jumped at the opportunity.

As a star to hardcore fans, GGG has had some minor endorsements due to his ticket sales and HBO ratings.  However, less than a month shy of his 35th birthday he is still not a household name because he has not fought any (to no fault of his own).

The Kazakh is even extremely engaging outside the ring.  He has this goofy Mad Magazine look to him to go along with a well-mannered heavy accent.  Unlike Hagler, if you saw this guy on the street and didn’t know any better, you wouldn’t be in the least bit intimidated.

That would be a mistake though!  This guy is an all-time pound-for-pound puncher with both hands.  Personally I have not seen such spectacular knockout power since a young Mike Tyson burst onto the scene.

The difference is one-punch knockout artists often tend to be one-trick ponies or mentally weak in the face of adversity.  Though not slick, GGG has tremendous fundamental footwork and has displayed a granite chin.  Just ask David Lemieux (probably the next best middleweight right now after these two) whom Golovkin stopped in the 8th round a year and a half ago in the Garden.

Daniel Jacobs is a classic boxer-puncher with speed and power in both hands.  Hailing from the same Brownsville that produced Tyson and Riddick Bowe, Jacobs brings his own impressive streak of wins inside the distance with 12.

His biggest win in the ring was a first round stoppage of Peter Quillin in December, 2015.  Jacobs’ one hiccup came in a KO loss to Dmitry Pirog on 7/31/10 in fight which he was leading.

While Quillin was his biggest win inside the ring, his truly greatest victory came when beat a May, 2011 diagnosis of cancer in his spinal chord.  After knocking out cancer, he has knocked out every opponent since.

I do not expect this fight to do a large PPV number.  Golovkin is a PPV fighter with the right dance partner.

Though the Jacobs is in my opinion the #2 middleweight in the world right now behind GGG, he is not yet a PPV fighter.  Combine that with HBO continuing to be cheap with it’s 24/7 series, only doing one installment for this fight and the college hoops, you are probably looking at pedestrian PPV buys.  The fight should be on regular HBO.

But in the ring this is the best middleweight fight that can be made in boxing.  The fight fans are clamoring for outside a potential Floyd Mayweather-Conor McGreggor circus is Golovkin vs. Saul “Canelo” Alvarez.

The problem is Canelo has taken a page from Mayweather’s book, who took a page from Sugar Ray Leonard’s book of waiting out dangerous opponents until they show clear signs of decline.  However, the reality is though Canelo is a good fighter, he is not in those guys’ league.

I believe Jacobs is a better fighter than Canelo and a more legitimate threat to Golovkin’s supremacy at this point.  The reason fans want that fight is to watch the prima donna get beat into the hospital.

So, enough about guys that don’t want to fight.  Let’s talk about these willing combatants who conduct themselves properly both in and out of the ring.

The key to victory for Golovkin is to be himself.  He needs to apply relentless pressure, cut off the ring and work his way in with the jab.  Even if Jacobs’ jab is quicker and sharper, he can disrupt it with his own.

If GGG lunges in with big shots before jabbing his way into range, he will pay a stiff price.  He also needs to commit to the body to slow Jacobs down.

The biggest key for Jacobs is to box.  He can punch but his chin is suspect.  A straight firefight with GGG would be suicidal for the Miracle Man.  He should use his speed and athleticism to create angles where he can turn the Kazakh and make him pay when he misses.

Another factor in Jacobs favor is his size.  He is the bigger and possibly stronger guy even though he is not the more powerful puncher.

So, he should pick his spots where he makes Golovkin back up at times.  Golovkin is not the type of fighter who is comfortable fighting while backing up.

One other thing-Jacobs should not ignore the body.  Golovkin is a vicious body puncher and body punchers don’t like taking punishment to the body.

So, how do I see this fight paying out?  First off Golovkin has questions to answer from his last performance (5th round stoppage of welterweight champion Kell Brook).

Not all that different from Hagler’s last victory (a hard fought 11th round win over John “The Beast” Maghabi), Golovkin did not look himself against Brook.  There were rumors before the fight that Golovkin was sick, which he denied.

Golovkin looked sloppy and fatigued.  He lunged in with power shots attempting to end it with one punch.  He ended it, but he took punishment himself.

Is Golovkin showing some age at 34 like Hagler did at 31?  Or was it just an off night?  One thing is for sure.  If Golovkin fights like that against Jacobs his title reign will end barring one big shot.

But I am going to believe that last fight was an aberration.  I believe he will be his normal seek and destroy self.

Jacobs size, speed and athleticism will put him up early.  I believe GGG will feel Jacobs’ power.  However, I believe Golovkin will keep denting Jacobs with his own power even in rounds he loses similar to how Julio Cesar Chavez systematically broke down Meldrick Taylor in their first meeting.

Once Jacobs begins to slow down a bit his chin will be tested.  He has been knocked out.  I am not saying the Miracle Man has a porcelain beard, but he is in with a historical puncher.

Taking all of this into account, along with the fact that Golovkin has never tasted defeat, I will go with a mid-to late round stoppage for the Kazakh warrior.  Talk soon.

-Marksman

PS:  Before the fight, if you are tired of watching men slap hands after every free throw even if they miss, the NCAA Wrestling Finals (8 PM EST on ESPN) is the best sporting event of the year that few realize.  If you like real tough guys who are real student athletes, you will be hooked!

Sacrament Over Sacrifice During Lent

Lent is upon us and I hear people talking about avoiding meat and what they are giving up.  These are nice gestures, but they seem to often be more about habit and ritual than honoring Jesus and the ultimate sacrifice He made for us.

Lent honors our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ’s 40 days of fasting in the desert which culminated in a mini showdown between He and Satan.  The Father allowed Jesus to be tempted by Satan.  But Jesus faced and defeated these temptations temporarily sending the devil packing.

Jesus went on with his ministry which he knew full well was a 3 year march to the cross to suffer and die, then rise gaining victory over evil.  This allows us the opportunity at eternal life in Heaven despite our sins.

The father gave Jesus the same free will He gives us.  Jesus could have called it off at anytime.

But He loves us so much that He willingly dropped every bit of his blood and bodily water defeating Satan on our behalf.  Good Friday represents Christ’s torturous crucifixion.  Easter Sunday represents His glorious Resurrection (it is actually the start of a season from the Resurrection to Pentecost).

So, do you think having a tuna sub every Friday and giving up cookies for 40 days is enough to honor that?  We can’t match His sacrifice, but I have a better idea.

Go to confession, and start going to Mass every Sunday.  If you are not Catholic, repent in your own way and start going to church every Sunday.

Here come the excuses and rationalizations attempting to justify the laziness and neglect (I used to make them too).  I will address some of the most common ones.

1-“God is everywhere, so why do I have to go to church to speak with Him?”  True!  God IS everywhere.  His 4th Commandment tells us to keep holy the Sabbath.  It’s a commandment, not a suggestion.

Jesus says if we do not eat His flesh and drink His blood we do not have life in us.  You cannot order up the Eucharist at your local drive-through.

2-“The pedophilia and sex scandals turn me off.”  They Should!  I hate that I have been put on the defensive as a Catholic.  These wolves in sheep’s clothing should spend the rest of their lives in a cell.

If someone was a direct or indirect victim of this, I could understand this rationale.  However, the majority of lax-Christians were not victims and the majority of priests, preachers and rabbis (no, not only the Catholic Church has had this problem) did not partake in this even though the Satanic media would love for you to believe otherwise.

Aside from that, why would you let these scumbags drive you out of God’s House?  That’s an awful lot of power to give to some deranged perverts.  The only thing you are doing is allowing Satan to drive you further from God.

The truth is if you really look inward, this is just and excuse to justify laziness.  Do you refuse to watch a Woody Allen movie?  Do you change the radio station every single time a Michael Jackson song comes on?  Do you refuse to watch a Penn State game even if they are playing your team?

3-“I just don’t have time to get to church.”  If you are a cop or nurse working a weekend shift that goes from Saturday night through Sunday you are absolved.

If on the other hand you have time to go out, shop, attend sporting events, etc., you have time to give the Lord and hour.

4-“I just don’t get much out of it and I find it boring.”  The more you put into it, the more you will get out of it.

Yes, Mass can get boring at times.  I don’t think Jesus was having a blast carrying that big heavy cross up the hill all beaten and dehydrated before being nailed to it.  But He did it anyway.

So, when Mass gets boring just take some solace in the fact that you are making Jesus happy.  He does everything for us.  We can’t grin and bare an hour?

The Mass is Jesus banquet that he invites us to every week.  Let me give you a hypothetical.

Let’s say you saved a friend’s life, then invited him over for dinner every weekend.  In response, that friend had an excuse every single week for blowing off your invitation.  Would you not get a bit insulted?

Then why would you want to disrespect your Savior with these weak-ass excuses?  So, while it’s nice to avoid ice cream for 40 days, you and Jesus will get a lot more satisfaction from a weekly visit.  Talk soon.

-Marksman